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Warren
County, Ohio Virtual Cemetery Project |
The Miami Monthly Meeting of Friends was established on the 13th day of the 10th month,1803 being a part of the Redstone Quarterly Meeting and the Baltimore Annual Meeting. The eastern boundary was the Hocking River, the southern was the Ohio River, but there was no limit to the north or to the west. The Miami Quarterly Meeting was opened, Fifth month 1809. The building of the White Brick Meetinghouse at Waynesville was begun in 1811 to accommodate the Quarterly Meeting. In 1828, a division in philosphy was followed by withdrawals by one side or the other into so-called "Hicksite" and so called "Orthodox" branches. Further separations occurred within the Orthodox body. When the separation occurred in 1828 , the Yearly Meeting split into two bodies: Indiana Yearly Meeting Orthodox (later Friends United Meeting) and Indiana Yearly Meeting Hicksite (later Friends General Conference). At Waynesville the Hicksite body retained the White Brick Meeting House and in 1836, the Orthodox body constructed the Red Brick Meeting House. Three extant Hicksite burial lists are held by the S. Arthur Watson Library at Wilmington College. Thanks to Patti Kinsinger, Head of the Reference Department at the library, the "Chandler-Brown" list found in Elizabeth Moore's estate has been scanned and made available on line as a pdf document at http://www2.wilmington.edu/academics/QuakerOnlineResourcesfromWatson.cfm No Orthodox burial books are known to exist. |
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Friends
Burial Ground [New Sign added in
2007] When the two meetings separated in 1828, the graveyard was also divided. The sugar maple in the middle of the cemetery is on the line that goes from the street through the tree to the edge of the property. The portion between this line and the Red Brick belongs to the Wilmington Yearly Meeting, while the western portion belongs to Miami Monthly Meeting. The Hicksites began burials in 1832. John Satterthewaite, builder of many of Waynesville's early buildings is buried in the Hicksite side, and Abijah O'Neall, the first Quaker to come to Waynesville is buried in the Orthodox side. [The rest of the sign contains a lists of the names and dates of those buried by row and grave number] |
By Diana Linkous 25 September 2007 |
This page created 29 May 2007 and last updated
29 January, 2012
© 2007-2012 Arne
H Trelvik All rights reserved